In 1869, when Edison was just 22 years old, he got his first patent
for a telegraphic vote-recording machine for the legislature. Each
legislator would move a switch on Edison's machine that would record his
vote on a particular bill.
When a business partner brought the invention to Washington D.C., this is what Congress had to say about it:
The
chairman of the committee, unimpressed with the speed with which the
instrument could record votes, told him that "if there is any invention
on earth that we don't want down here, that is it." The slow pace of
roll call voting in Congress and other legislatures enabled members to
filibuster legislation or convince others to change their votes.
Edison's vote recorder was never used.
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